Politics in Nigeria Chapter 18. Country Bio: Nigeria.

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Politics in Nigeria Chapter 18

Transcript of Politics in Nigeria Chapter 18. Country Bio: Nigeria.

Page 1: Politics in Nigeria Chapter 18. Country Bio: Nigeria.

Politics in NigeriaChapter 18

Page 2: Politics in Nigeria Chapter 18. Country Bio: Nigeria.
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Country Bio: Nigeria

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Comparing to the Rest of Africa

Nigeria is a megastate!Larger than Britain and France

1/5 of Africa’s population

World’s largest black population

International ImportanceLarge petroleum reserves

Large standing military

104 universities makes it the center for learning and research in Africa.

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Policy Challenges

They are enjoying the largest period of civilian rule in history.

Running into ethnic, regional and religious conflicts.

Political elites and separatist groups are calling for a weak federation or more independent states

Declining quality of elections are hurting perceptions of democracy.

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Democratization Begins

1999—Olusegun Obasanjo was elected democratically, and a few weeks later a democratically elected legislature followed

2003 reelection by a landslide

2007---Obasanjo supporters attempt to amend the constitution to allow an additional term

Umar Musa Yar’Adua was elected president

He falls ill in 2009 which challenged the constitution

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His Illness and ChaosYAR'ADUA ILLNESS TIMELINE

23 November 2009 Goes to hospital in Saudi Arabia

26 November Presidential doctors say he has pericarditis - inflammation of the heart lining

23 December First court case filed urging him to step down

5 January 2010 Two more court cases filed, rights group wants president declared "missing"

12 January President gives first interview from Saudi Arabia

27 January Cabinet declares president fit

29 January Court says no need for formal transfer of power

9 Feb: Vice-President Goodluck Jonathan becomes acting president

24 Feb: Yar'Adua returns

5 May: Death

(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cELhxqxeK54)

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Failures of Democracy?

Aside from political turmoil, Nigeria also faces these issues:

A lack of government social welfare (education, health, potable water, transit and communication).

Low power generation (since 1999)Which complicates private investment

Per Capita income is 1/10th of that in the US or west Europe

158/182 on the HDI

130/180 on Transparency International’s Corruption Index

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Other Struggles

Previous democratic attempts in Nigeria have failed, but the current government is slowly evading the fate of previous democracies.

Sectarian violence (ethnic/regional/religious lands)

Tempted with authoritarianism since democracy is failing.

Several problems stem from a past of colonialism etc.

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Democracy vs Tradition

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xpZjULlUo6U

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Thinking about NigeriaKey questions

How is the legacy of colonialism reflected in Nigerian politics?What role does ethnicity play in reinforcing the country’s difficulties?Why does Nigeria remain one of the poorest countries in the world despite its massive oil and natural gas reserves?How have frequent shifts from civilian to military rule and back again exacerbated the country’s many social and economic problems?

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The Evolution of the Nigerian State

Before the BritishNumerous well-developed political, cultural, and economic systemsHausa states in northYoruba kingdoms in west and southwest (and neighboring Benin)Igbo villages in southeast and Niger DeltaPortuguese slave trade of late 15th century

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The Evolution of the Nigerian State

Colonialism

British colony at Lagos as base for trade in early 19th centuryInternational Berlin West Africa Conference (1885)

European nations’ glory and balance of power in playEuropeans wanted new marketsChristian missionary and civilizing impulses

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The Evolution of the Nigerian State

Colonial ruleSingle Nigerian colony in 1914Indirect rule in north; colonial regime in southEducation system by missionaries with government support (mostly in south)

Created a new Nigerian eliteMade possible a domestic, critical press

British tried to make colony self-supportingIntroduced cash crops; forced colony to import foodColonial industries made wage laborers out of Nigerian producers

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The Evolution of the Nigerian State

IndependenceFirst drive for independence came with WWIWWII made independence inevitableBritish promulgated constitution (1946)October 1960 elections and independence

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The Evolution of the Nigerian State

Burden of problems inherited from colonial times

1. Inhibits national identify formation: colonial rule (direct in the south/indirect in the north) created regional identities and rearranged boundaries.

2. Ethnic and religious division and tensionsindigenous and Christian religions in the south, Islam in the north; underlying ethnic identities rearranged boundaries.

3. Residual colonial institutional and cultural features

bureaucracy, language, colonial boundaries4. Dependency

extractive economic relations with the West and former colonial power; neocolonialism (continued exploitation)

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5. System of governmentWestminster and procedural features of western democracy

6. Ineffective civil society and weak democratic consolidation

7. Imposed national boundaries

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The Evolution of the Nigerian State

The First Republic

Traditional parliamentary systemFederal system Nigerian political culture unsuited to adversarial system (not everyone represented)High stakes politics and corrupted elections led to overthrow of regime

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The Evolution of the Nigerian State

Military Rule I

Justified by the need to restore orderEthnic divisionsCivil warCoup follows coup follows coup

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The Evolution of the Nigerian State

The Second RepublicPresidential systemGovernment-licensed political partiesContested electionOil price collapse and economic disasterCorrupt, violent elections (1983)

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The Evolution of the Nigerian State

Military Rule IICoup to restore democracyCounter coup because of favoritismConstitutional engineering to create viable regimeCoup in response to conflicts within ruling junta

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The Evolution of the Nigerian State

Military Rule IIIMore authoritarian than previous military regimesAs corrupt as any government

Fourth Republic1999 election of Obasanjo2007 election of Yar’Adua

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The Fragile Nigerian State

The Fourth RepublicAmerican-style presidencyNational Assembly similar to U.S. CongressAnglo-American style judiciary

Network of local and state courts with a Supreme CourtSharia appellate court option for states

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Selecting an executive

Direct popular election

Variety of candidates

Fixed election cycle

President cannot run for a third consecutive term

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Nigerian ExecutiveUnique Features

Military coups.

The Nigerian Parliament is more compliant.

Parties play a more significant role in empowering the Nigerian president because his party controls the legislature and helps get his agenda passed.

The Nigerian President receives more international support.

Presidential Structure

Acting President: Goodluck Jonathan

Serves as Head of State and Head of Government

Independently elected according to the 1999 Constitution.

President must be a citizen of Nigeria, at least 40 years of age, and be sponsored by his political party.

Limited to two terms of office, four years each.

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Goodluck Jonathan

Controls:

Military and Police

Federal Ministries (the Cabinet)

Federal Civil Service

Revenue Allocation System

Federal Commissions

Signs bills and refers back to Assembly

Appoints ambassadors, etc.

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The Fragile Nigerian State

The Personalization of Power

Person in position more important than formal responsibilities and powers of office

Corruption - massive and ubiquitous

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The Fragile Nigerian State

FederalismBlunted ethnic conflictUncertainty about powers of statesDuplication of services and bureaucraciesPreserved ethnic divisions

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Nigeria and the Plight of the Third World

Should there be a Nigeria?

Prospects for national reorganization in Africa very unlikely

Solutions will have to come within current national boundaries.

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Participation in NigeriaIdentify areas in which discussions of political policy take place in some of the countries studied so far….

Possible Answers:Informal family discussionsNews mediaAdvertising mediaCivic groupsFormal Political Settings (Political parties, campaigns, interest groups, lobbying, and government committees and ministries)

How do discussion arenas differ from decision-making arenas where policies are actually adopted?

ConflictAccuracy of information

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Identity Politics in Nigeriaprebendalism

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Background to prebendalism

Traditional Nigerian societies were village societies:

Nearly everyone was related to everyone elseSurvival and well-being depended on cooperation and sharing.There was NOT a great difference in wealth and income. EVERYONE TOOK CARE OF EVERYONE ELSE IN THE VILLAGE!

This mindset spread throughout Nigeria even after British colonial occupation.

This concept is foreign to many AmericansExample: Hillary Clinton, It Takes a Village

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DefinitionPrebendalism is the version of identify politics practiced in Nigeria

Prebend = salary paid to a clergymen from a special fund administered by his church or cathedral.

In Nigeria, prebendalism describes the common notion that a person elected to or employed by the government is ENTITLED to benefit from the position.

Those who are elected or hired are also entitled to a share of the benefits that come with power and control of government spending.

It is the disbursement of public offices and state rents to one’s ethnic-based clients.

An extreme form of clientalism that refers to the practice of mobilizing cultural and other sectional identities by political aspirants and officeholders for the purpose of corruptly appropriating state resources.

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Further Discussion of Nigeria…

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Feedback

Relatively free press (even under military regimes)Low literacy rateGovernment-controlled broadcast media key to feedbackState broadcast stations now compete with national network

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Public Policy

Economic development and structural adjustment

Export-based economy vulnerableOil prices have created crises and opportunitiesImport substitution has not worked wellStructural adjustment results mixed

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REVIEW: What are patron-client networks?

Relationships between higher-up individuals (patrons) and a subordinate individual (client). Each benefits from the relationship as political favors are given by the patron in return for support from the client.

What is the name for the system in Nigeria? Mexico?

In Nigeria such relationships are called prebendalism and in Mexico it is called the camarilla system.

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REVIEW: What is an Ethnic Cleavage? And what are

the three major cleavages in Nigeria?

Differences or division in the characteristics of a population.

Ausa-Fulani, Igbo, and Yoruba

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Ethnic conflict in Nigeria….

There are hundred of ethnic groups and conflicts occur over religion, economic status and traditions.

Hausa-Muslim group who dominates North while the rest of the country is largely Christianity or indigenous religions.

“…democratic compromise difficult. The different groups clamor for scarce resources and for control of the government. This leads to what Daniel Chirot refers to as "democratic paralysis”…”

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What has Nigeria done to reduce ethnic conflict?

Require that political parties have broad popular support.

This is done by the National Election Commission (NEC), a commission that requires presidential candidates have support from a variety of regions. It also establishes guidelines for party formation.

Obasanjo’s contributions:Attempting to create a more stable and open society.Nigeria has divided funds more equitably among the states. One member from each state in his cabinet.

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How has the government’s response to ethnic conflict

impacted political stability in the country?There has been moderate success.

Obasanjo was elected using the rules of the FEDCO (now the INEC) and has remained fairly popular with many groups.

He is one of the few Nigerian politicians not elected because of ethnic origin.

However…Ethnic conflict continues as evidenced by “…some Nigerians have using these new democratic freedoms as a justification for advancing separatist sentiments, including religious fundamentalism and other potentially antidemocratic, destabilizing ideologies.”

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How has Nigeria democratized its political

process?Implementation of new constitution eliminating military rule.

Freer press.

Reappearance of regular elections; elections have continued since 1999)

Protections for ethnic and religious groups

Redrawing of state boundaries to increase representation (including increasing the number of states).

Direct election of president to increase legitimacy.

Creation of Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)

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However…

There has been some resistance to Nigeria’s democratization:

Coups d’étatIntroduction of Shari’ah law into some states (Zamfara) has undermined democratization.Illegitimate elections.Military resorting to violence.Poor human rights record (Odi).Persecution of Ken Saro-Wiwa and others